considering she voted to send him to Iraq: I really doubt my boyfriend will ever talk to me the way he talks about Clinton

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Amanda Marcotte thinks she knows everything. It's the curse of those
rejected by love. It's what allows her to ignore Hillary Clinton's long
support for the Iraq War, for war on Syria, for war on Libya.

Oh, Amanda, go try to hit up another man for abortion money when you're not sure if he's the father.

It's funny how Iraq mattered to Amanda whens he worked for John Edwards
(who apologized for his vote in a column for THE WASHINGTON POST) but
now doesn't mean a thing -- funny in a sort of pathetic way but
everything about Amanda's pathetic.

She doesn't care about the war built on lies because, again, she's the
woman who publicly whined that her boyfriend offered to marry her when
she told him she was pregnant and all she wanted was for him to cover
half the abortion -- she also confessed that she wasn't sure he was the
father. That's trash, that's Amanda.

Day 225 of The Mosul Slog.

The Islamic State seized Mosul in June of 2014.

It's now June of 2017.

Three years later and they've still not been run out of the city.

The current operation began in October of 2016 because the government of
Iraq clearly wasn't too concerned about a terrorist group seizing a
city as evidenced by their do nothing attitude for over two years.

ALJAZEERA notes:The UN estimates almost 10,000 people fled from Mosul’s northwest and the Old City every day last week.More than 750,000 people have been displaced from the city since October.

But it's not easy getting out of Mosul. The Iraqi government told
residents to stay in their homes until late April, they never offered
safe passage out of Mosul and now they're targeting vehicles. RUDAW reports:

Any motorized vehicles in western Mosul are considered to be a threat
and subject to strikes by the US-led international coalition and the
Iraqi forces, while authorities have encouraged civilians to leave the
war-torn areas by foot in the face of starvation and hunger.

"Iraqi Security Forces transmitted information to residents of West
Mosul a week or two ago telling them that, due to ISIS' use of vehicles
(both automobiles and motorcycles), moving or static, could be
considered a threat," US Col. Ryan Dillon, the spokesperson for the
coalition told Rudaw English.

As many as 180,000 people are reportedly hungry and living in miserable
conditions, according to the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP).

In hours of footage captured by Iraqi photojournalist Ali Arkady, licensed by ABC News and broadcast on World News Tonight with David Muir and Nightline last week,
officers of an elite Iraqi unit called the Emergency Response Division
(E.R.D.) are shown directing the torture and execution of civilians in Mosul
late last year. A U.S. military spokesman said that while an
investigation of new evidence of atrocities committed by the E.R.D. is
warranted, there is no legal reason the U.S. cannot continue to work
with the unit.

The unit had already been blacklisted in March 2015 under the Leahy Act,
which requires foreign military units to be banned from receiving U.S.
military aid if there is "credible information that such unit has
committed a gross violation of human rights.” Top American commanders,
however, have continued to praise the successes of the E.R.D. and boast
of a "fruitful partnership" between the U.S. military and the unit,
including coordinating airstrikes on ISIS.

“The photos are sickening. They clearly depict war crimes,” Sen. Patrick Leahy
(D-Vt.), who authored the federal law 20 years ago, said in a statement
to ABC News. “That they were brazenly lauded by the unit’s leader
suggests that they were far from aberrations. It is my understanding
that the United States no longer supports the Iraqi unit involved, but
we should insist that the individuals responsible, and particularly the
leaders, be prosecuted and appropriately punished. The fact that U.S.
military personnel praised the Iraqi unit’s cooperation is deeply
disturbing and requires further investigation by the Pentagon.”

Turning to the US and Detroit . . .

Detroit Regional Chamber And Detroit Public Television Bring the 2017 Mackinac Policy Conference to Michigan

For the seventh consecutive year, the Detroit Regional Chamber and
Detroit Public Television (DPTV) will collaborate to provide
Michigan citizens with the highest level of access to the Mackinac
Policy Conference’s content. Viewers can watch the conference live
online by visiting the
MiWeek website at http://miweek.org.

Since 2011, the Chamber and DPTV have
worked together to significantly broaden access to the event. Each
year, an average of nearly 50,000 unique audience members watch at least
some part of DPTV’s Mackinac Policy Conference coverage via
computers, phones and tablets during and immediately after the event.

All content, including livestreams,
will also be offered, at no cost, to any public or commercial broadcast
outlet, as well as all other news organizations in Michigan, to continue
to make coverage of the Conference as accessible as possible.

DPTV plans to broadcast and/or webcast:

Streaming
coverage of virtually every Conference session (with the exception of
those not allowed under speaker contracts), featuring keynote addresses
and panel discussions.

A daily half-hour recap of Conference activity at 7:30 p.m. on TV.

Live and recorded interviews with speakers, Conference participants and analysts.